No Surgery, No Problem: Treating Our Dog’s ACL Tear

by Jessica Dolce on November 5, 2013

Birdie graduated this month (from physical therapy, not Yale).

Turns out, we are doing pretty ok without that surgery she was supposed to get. Conservative Management has officially saved the day by taking care of Birdie’s injury and respecting our budget. Let’s discuss:

First of all, I’m double-dog-daring myself to believe that she really is doing as well as she seems to be doing. The pessimist in me isn’t entirely convinced. Frankly, I’m afraid that as I write about how well she’s doing, Birdie’s leg is going to spontaneously combust. I have a fire extinguisher next to my desk, just in case.

Anyway, when Birdie tore her ACL this summer (a complete tear, not just a partial), surgery was the recommended course of action. For better or worse, we couldn’t afford it, so we had to explore other options. We landed on a conservative management plan. Here’s what we did: First we restricted her activity. No jumping on and off the couch, no running around in the yard. The goal was to restrict movement and allow stabilizing scar tissue to form. Birdie didn’t mind this lack of activity as her DNA test revealed that Birdie is indeed half Beagle and half a baked potato.

That being said, Birdie isn’t overweight. If she was, we would have had to put her on a diet. Extra weight is hard on injured legs. We did add a new heavy duty joint supplement, plus lots of stinky fish oil to her diet. After a couple of weeks on NSAIDs (which were too hard on her liver and kidneys to continue using them), she’s been off any and all medications. We also added non-slip area rugs around the house, so that Birdie wouldn’t slide on our hard wood floors and tweak her leg or back.

Most importantly, we started hanging out with our physical therapist, Gayle Hickok, a lot. We started with five visits in a row that first week post-surgical consult. At each visit, Birdie got some time with the cold laser, manual treatments and exercises, and then hydrotherapy in Gayle’s heated saltwater pool.

Ton o’ Bricks hits the high seas

Birdie was not interested in swimming – never, not once, not at all. She chose to practice nonviolent resistance by standing still on the pool’s ramp without budging or blinking. Birdie is the Rosa Parks of canine hydrotherapy.

She is also surprisingly strong for a small senior citizen and “Ton o’ Bricks” Birdie had to be lifted into the water, all dead weight, by her life jacket. Once she was in the water, Gayle would gently guide her through exercises. Birdie occasionally faked massive reverse sneezing attacks in order to escape the pool (we know she was faking because the reverse sneezing stop the second her paws hit the concrete. Also, she was laughing at us).

On the other hand, Birdie thought the laser and manual treatments were exquisite, since that part of the rehab required that she be hand fed chicken while lying down on a soft bed. That’s my girl. I was also happy that these treatments were addressing her whole body, not just her bum leg.

Over the past three months we reduced our visits to twice a week, then once a week, then just every other week. From the start, Gayle felt that we had made the right choice – conservative management – rather than surgery, and Birdie’s improvements have backed that up.

About a month into Birdie’s physical therapy visits, we also began using a product at home called the Loop which produces a Pulsed Electromagnetic Field around her injured bits.The Loop is supposed to reduce inflammation and pain and increases blood circulation. I can’t say for sure if it’s helped, but it does compliment the other therapies we’re doing and Birdie continues to be pain-med-free.

Birdie, wearing the Loop, looks sad because no one is feeding her chicken right-this-second.

Last week, Gayle said that Birdie was good to go for a month or more until our next visit. This worried me (my DNA test reveals I’m part Eeyore). But Gayle swore to me that Birdie’s leg is in great condition. She has full extension, is weight bearing and can walk and run around, plus she has no obvious signs of pain when her leg is being manipulated. She’s come a long way since our first visit when she was only using her leg about 50% of the time.

Birdie won’t be competing in a decathlon any time soon ever, but our hope was to reduce Birdie’s pain and help her get mobile again. It looks like we did it. She still has days where she’s a little gimpy, which could be the injury or it might be coming from her atrophied leg muscles. We’re working on rebuilding her muscle and strength in that leg. But most of the time, she’s doing fine.

It’s hard to say which piece of the puzzle had the biggest impact on her recovery. Our physical therapist isn’t sure either. She keeps reminding me that all of the therapies and supplements are playing a part in her recovery and are working together to support her overall health and well being.

That’s the funny thing about taking this approach – it’s clearly working, but there are days when I still doubt myself and the choices I’ve made for Birdie. The surgical option, plus the recovery and physical therapy that would have followed it, seems so much more tangible and measurable. With the conservative management approach, it’s a bit more subtle and there are fewer vets involved. Things have been going so well, we haven’t been back to see a vet since our original surgical consult.

Birdie and Gayle: What’s a little laser between BFFs?

I’m not sure why it’s so hard for me to believe Birdie is really ok. Sometimes I get a little panicky with an internal dialogue that goes something like this: “What if she’s not really better? What if we were wrong and she really does need the surgery? What if her leg is only pretending to be a real leg, but it’s really made up of marshmallows and candy canes, which is why she’s always licking herself? Will we have to buy her a whole new leg then? What if? What if? What if?”

That’s why I have to keep reminding myself that when Birdie runs across the yard it’s the real deal. She’s not faking it so that I won’t worry about her. Dogs are a pretty honest bunch, which I really appreciate. They don’t put on a show for our benefit (They will do it for their own benefit. See: Birdie sneezing in pool).

Dogs don’t tell fibs or fake it to save us from feeling badly or worrying about them. If you give them a toy that they don’t like, dogs won’t play it. Or eat food they think it’s awful. Or sleep on a bed they think is uncomfortable. Dogs don’t tell white lies to spare our feelings.

So I’m starting to believe that Birdie really is as good as she looks. Her life is back to normal. Opting out of that surgery we couldn’t afford in the first place wasn’t such a bad choice after all. In fact, it might have been the right choice, even if we could have afforded the surgery.

It makes me wonder how many dogs would benefit from a conservative management approach as a first option, not a “that’s all we can afford” option. Based on your earlier comments, many people never hear a peep from their vet that conservative management/physical therapy might be an option. That’s a shame. Some dogs do need the surgery, of course, but depending on the individual dog and/or the financial situation of the owner, there are other routes to explore. Vets should at least mention it.

I don’t want to jinx anything – Birdie’s leg hasn’t burst into flames yet – so I’ll just end things by knocking on wood and sharing some resources for non-surgical options if you’re in a similar boat and want to learn more about what’s out there.

Like this:

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One of my dogs, a sort of mini-border collie kind of mutt, age 8 years, injured her ACL. She put partial weight on it. I never took her to the vet. This was huge for me. I am former CVT and an acupuncturist and i work in a supplement store. I did not want the onus of surgery hanging over me. I put her on a regimen of salmon oil, Eclectic Herbs freeze dried turmeric powder, Redi-dog hyaluronic acid, and very little activity, that slowly built up over 3 months. She had a few dog aspirin for about 4 days at the beginning.I did daily moxabustion and Acutonics (tuning forks instead of acupuncture needles) on the appropriate points. I did gentle massage. I fretted constantly that I was a bad dog mother for not going to the vet. But this one I knew we could work out. If it had been a lot worse, I would have gone. She is fine now, with only the slightest gimp that no one sees but me. So I like your piece. Power to you. All this surgery and over-medication drives me nuts.

I had very similar results with my dog. He tore his ACL, and luckily I have a really good rehab vet nearby. With the underwater treadmill, laser treatment, acupuncture, and strengthening exercises, my dog healed. It took a few months, but no more than a surgical recovery would have been. That was 4 years ago, and we’ve had no problems since.

on the ‘dogs don’t tell white lies’ front, i have to disagree. i feel one of my dogs puts on a bit of a show for me sometimes – going through the motions of joy and excitement, or patience and tolerance, just for the sake of her humans.

my other dog, however, is the most HONEST creature i’ve ever met. i see the utter dissatisfaction in his eyes daily…

Oh dear, I wish I’d heard about this 18 months ago. We went for the surgery and 8 months later the other knee went – possibly the recovery of first knee put pressure on the second. But one leg and then the other in heavy bandage and limping etc resulted in hip problems – arthritis much worse, the vet said, and she had to agree the two surgeries contributed, plus the fact that his 13th birthday is only 4 months off. He is supposed to lead a quite life now, but this is an extremely active dog who thinks nothing of running for miles across hills. Now if he does he is in agony for days. We might have been better using alternative therapies from the start. Next time ….

I’m sorry to hear you guys are going through this. It’s hard to know if our approach would have been a good fit for your pup. Birdie is pretty laid back, so we never had to worry about getting her back to running for miles. But I bet some of these therapies would be helpful for your dog now. Cold laser has helped Birdie’s arthritic back and hydrotherapy might be safe, therapeutic exercise. I’m wishing your family well!

In 2006 my Dobe was on 3 legs due to ACL. I was advised to do surgery but chose to try first an alternative treatment plan of acupuncture, etc. Within one month she was standing and comfortably using all four legs and we avoided surgery…..7 years of success and now my almost 11 year old dog is STILL running and playing and enjoying life. If the alternative methods wouldn’t have helped her, I would have done surgery, but I wanted to give this a chance and am so glad I did. Thanks for a wonderful article!

I’m so glad Birdie is feeling better! I too wish I’d heard about this sooner. While my own mutt has never had this injury (pardon me while I go find some wood to knock on…), I’ve had a couple friends cry for days over the decision and go into big debt for ACL surgeries, not knowing about any other options. One thing you don’t mention though is the cost of all the alternative therapies – I’m sure they aren’t cheap, so I was wondering if you tallied the bills up, and if so what the savings played out to? Hundreds or thousands (or neither)?

Thanks so much for your writing – I’ve learned a lot from your blog and enjoy your style. Best wishes from just a bit south in the Granite State!

I haven’t done the final tally yet, but we’ve spent hundreds, not even a thousand, on physical rehab over the past three months. The surgery would have cost at least 3k, plus physical rehab afterwards, so this definitely saved us thousands of dollars!

My impression is that the cost of physical rehab and alternative therapies will vary from place to place, practitioner to practitioner, but I think it’s safe to say it may be a more affordable route for many families to explore.

Congratulations to you and Birdie on the success! As usual your post has arrived at the perfect time in my life. Sampson has recently developed a mystery limp, and it doesn’t seem to be going away. It’s only been two weeks, and we’re still in the stage one: NSAIDs and rest, but we will probably be going back for more diagnostics next week because it doesn’t seem to be changing much. I spend a lot of time lately asking Sampson what is wrong with his leg, and he spends a lot of time lately asking me if we can go outside and play frisbee… Nothing makes you feel more poor than looking ahead at expensive Vet bills, and this post did a great deal to help me remember that expensive isn’t always better. “Diagnostics” though… [shudder]… I can just feel my bank account being bled dry.

Hi Melissa, the truth is that we’re still playing around with joint supplements, so I’m not sure what we use is worth recommending! We’ve always given her Nupro Silver, but we’ve added Vermont Pet Naturals Hip + Joint (extra strength) to the mix. I’ve also been looking at the supplement Arthroplex, but haven’t tried that yet. To help rebuild muscle, we’ve given Birdie a supplement recommended by our rehab therapist called Rejuvenate from the U of Nebraska Medical Center.

Glad Birdie is doing so well and hasn’t burst into flames :) What did you use for the heavy duty joint supplement? My girl has a touch of good ol’ arthritis going on in her front shoulder and won’t sit still for acupuncture so I am trying to figure out some things to help. She in on fish oil, traumeel and a joint supplement already but is also still limping and it breaks my heart :( She’s only 9 and so active and it seems to only bother her on the pavement…and nope she won’t wear booties…she has no fashion sense like her mom haha

Hi Adriane, I just shared some ideas for joint supplements in the comments (above), but I’m not sure I’ve found the right one yet, to be honest.

Birdie stayed still for the cold laser treatments (which really, really helped her arthritic back – not just her leg) because we fed her a lot of chicken. Maybe cold laser/chicken might work for your girl?

Thanks for replying so quickly :) I will definitely need to try the chicken with Maggie, I didn’t even think of that but since she is such a food sl*t I’m sure she would sit still long enough for the treatment :)

I’ll check out the other comments for the joint supplements, she is on Nurto Silver right now but doesn’t seem to be doing a whole lot…

Thanks for writing such awesome blog’s! I smile every time I see one in my inbox xoxo

Hi! Thanks so much for a great article. My labbie Oliver a very laid back sort of guy has a partial ACL tear. My mom took him to two different vets and both recommend surgery. My parents and I didn’t feel sugary was the best choice for him. We looked for rehab but none would take him unless he had the surgery. (at that time he was living with my parents in S. Ca). I currently live in CT and have taken my other dogs to Wizard of Paws. They are amazing! I asked if they thought rehab would be a wise idea for him. After talking we all deiced to give it a try. So Oliver moved out to CT. And around Labor Day he had his first session. In those sessions he get laser, “peanut/ball work” and underwater treadmill. For the first month he went twice a week and could only do 4 min on the treadmill. He’s now down to a once a week visit and 20 min on the treadmill. He’s been off all the pain meds since the middle of Sept. He feels great…almost too great.
A couple of years ago my female lab Nike had the same injury and we did the surgery. I wish we didn’t. It was so rough on her. I feel rehab would have been a much better rt for her.
Its not for everyone and its not 100% it will work. But it does have its value and is worth looking into.
If you are in CT I highly recommend Wizard of Paws!

Love this! I’ll be honest, every time Melvin leaps and misses and I’m always sure he’s torn something. I have had so many friends deal with the ACL surgery and almost all have had the other leg need the same. Ugh! I moved to a more holistic approach with Melvin’s allergies and am now totally on board with trying to avoid anything that requires medication. I’m trying to clean his liver, not add to it’s problems! Birdie and her candy leg are lucky to have you, even if you do throw her into a pool and cause dramatic reverse sneezing!

The Eeyore in me is waiting to see if Birdie tears the ACL in her other leg – it’s certainly very possible and happens to other dogs all the time! And if it does happen to Birdie we’d consider all options (surgery and/or conservative management) to fix her candy canes ; )

Our spaniel whippet cross Monroe didn’t tear an ACL but she had some sort of event, the vet thinks it may have been a thrown clot or embolism, she was suddenly completely paralyzed, couldn’t even blink. We did the steroids overnight at the ER clinic, no help, and considered taking her to Pullman, Washington, for surgery, but our vet (Patti Prato, blessings to her) suggested conservative care, a week of steroids and several weeks of acupuncture. The acupuncture treatments were a tremendous success and Monroe was back on her feet within a week, fully recovered in a month. We used a dog life preserver jacket/personal flotation device with a handle to help her get around for a while. Always ask about alternatives. Glad to hear Birdie is so much better!

This is not a funny topic, not at all, but I have to compliment your writing. I love the way you use words to fully involve your reader… I feel like I’ve known Birdie for years, in real life, and I’m totally in love with her. You have such a great way with humor in your writing.

As far as Birdie, I give you credit for not instantly going the way of surgery. That is a difficult choice for any pet owner, and I certainly think you made the right one. Best wishes for continued health and recovery for Birdie!

This is an excellent article. My neighbors 9 year old Vishla just tore his ACL, he is such an active dog, so when they said they were considering surgery I led them this route instead. No decisions have been made yet and we are still looking for someone in northern California for them, but I hope they do this route. It just seems to have so many more success stories, even after talking to someone at my local dog park, who is a physical therapist and works with his dogs for emotional visits as well. He works for PAWS at Stanford hospitals and has recommended doing this route as he has seen more successes with this holistic path. Thank you again for a wonderful article and I hope that Birdie remains to stay well and healthy… In both legs.

Great write up! I just ordered the Woundwear brace for my chocolate lab bingo who tore his left acl. Ive been reading and reading and reading finding information from surgery to conservative management. I cannot afford the surgery at this point and I did not like what my Vet had to say. We’re keeping our fingers and paws crossed! After researching the braces I came across this testimonial which the owner made a video and I was happy to see how their pup was doing. http://blog.woundwear.com/testimonials/scamper-recovers-with-a-trac-brace-bilateral-tear-video/
Good luck to everyone else!

Another GREAT resource: http://www.tiggerpoz.com — this site is like the bible of conservative management for CCL/ACL tears. It’s written anonymously but clearly the author is a vet. Also, there is a Yahoo group you can join: https://groups.yahoo.com/neo/groups/ConservativeManagement/info
My Great Pyrenees tore his CCL back late last summer, TPLO surgery recommended by all the vets, yada yada. I decided to try Conservative Management. My version is Adequan, an A-trac brace from WoundWear.com, and careful restriction of activity (increasing gradually over a period of months). It’s working very well. I don’t think he’s ready to wrestle or run on the beach but I am letting him walk fairly long distances and do gentle hikes. Meanwhile during this same period my former boss (a veterinarian) was trying to resolve a botched TPLO that had been done on his small breed dog, did a second surgery, and then did a third. The third was to amputate the leg. Surgery often has good results but it also has risks (in addition to being expensive); in my case I felt it only made sense to try conservative management first. I’m very, very glad I did.

I love your post! So funny and thoughtful and totally how I feel sometimes! My 8 year old pit bull had a TPLO back in September and I wish I would’ve known more about this. My vet didn’t give me any info on conservative management, I didn’t even know that was really an option! The surgery was rough for her. Fast forward to this past weekend and she is limping on the other leg! I think she has torn the other acl :( I feel like conservative management might be worth a shot this time since I really don’t want to put her through another surgery and finances are an issue right now. Of course I feel horrible putting a price on her too, but your post made me feel like I’m not alone and not a bad mom! Thanks for sharing your story and wish us luck as we try to go this route this time.

I’m sorry you’re going through this too. I hope you find a vet or a rehab specialist that can provide some support (in addition to the resources listed here) if you decide to go with conservative management route. And I’m wishing you both well!

Great post, and we can totally relate!! Our dog was diagnosed with ruptured CCL and CM was never mentioned. The worst part is that when we went to a rehab vet, he also insisted upon surgery! We thought like you- let’s try CM and if it doesn’t work we can always go to the surgery. So eight weeks of CM and our dog is doing great! But it’s too bad we didn’t have a rehab vet or therapist to work with our dog throughout that time. We’re looking for another one now. Can’t believe how everyone is so stuck on the darn surgery. And we look at the dog with each passing week, who seems to be more and more weight-bearing on the affected leg, and we think, “Are we crazy or is this dog getting better WITHOUT the surgery??!!”

Thank you so much for sharing your experience with us. My 6 year old Labx Rowan blew her ACL in January and we opted for surgery. She recovered fairly well in spite of a hellish winter here in CT, with below zero temps and lots of ice. Just 2 weeks ago she blew the other knee out and we decided to not do another surgery. We could not come up with another $3000 and I was concerned about putting all her wight on the other surgically fixed leg, as the muscle development on the leg was not so great yet. As soon as I turned down surgery I was pretty much kicked to the curb by my Vet of 20 years! She told me to rest her for 2 weeks and that was it. I called back today and was not offered an appointment,any info on rehab, supplements etc and when I asked the tech about Braces she had no idea. She asked the Vet and who said she does not recommend them. No reason why was given. I’m ridiculously stressed out,have a ton of unanswered questions and feel utterly abandoned and like I’m a bad owner. Your blog has given me hope that maybe I can do this. I really need a new Vet too!

I’m sorry to hear you’re going through this Robin. It IS stressful – no matter what you choose to do – and I’m sorry your vet is being so unaccommodating. I hope you find a vet or rehab specialist that can help you guys through this!

thank you so much for sharing. My 2 yr old Corgi is going through the same process. Just to make sure, was Birdie’s acl completely torn? Our vet said holistic approaches work well with partial tears but not full tears.

Yes it was a full tear. Sorry you’re going through this too. Birdie is doing well this summer and we’re still glad we opted out of surgery. But she’s 12 and laid back (though she can run!). So it’s never an easy call to make. Wishing you well!

We are on this path too. Daisy has been to see the vet twice and has an appointment with a physical therapist on Friday.
She is doing better on carprofen and tramadol and I have great hope that therapy will be of immense help. We had a vet who casted one of our dogs with an acl tear years ago. He did not recommend surgery right off. The casting worked. Plus rest and pain meds.
He was only two when it happened. Daisy is seven.

For me, the takeaway from this experience has been that, unless it is some sort of emergency, it may be worth exploring restriction/non-surgical options for some dogs (with full or partial tear). If it doesn’t work, then surgery is still an option.

My 12 year old dog, Spike, had ACL surgery when he was six. He had the more expensive surgery at the time, as he was a young and active healthy dog. The following months after the surgery were rough on both him and us, but we got through it. Of course, the savings account suffered greatly for it. I immediately enrolled in a pet insurance plan, anticipating that it may happen to him with his other leg. Fast forward six years to this morning, as he bounded down the steps (yes my old dog still bounds). Another torn ACL, this time in his left leg. Vet recommends surgery. While the pet insurance should cover some of the cost, I hate the thought of having him go through it all again. Thank you for your story, I will definitely consider conservative treatments, and ask those questions when we talk to the specialist this week.

hi my girl roxy she about 3 years old just turn her acl and they wont me to pay out 1500 dollars and i dont have that so i am going to do it without no surgery i love my dog to bits so home treatment it is can ppl give me advice please

After 16 weeks, Sadie our 9-year old Shih Tzu has started walking with only conservative management!! We were told she would have to have surgery for a full tear to her ACL. The surgeon said to give it 8 weeks to see if she would get better. I am so glad I did not give up!!!
I was diligent in giving her Knox gelatin (gelatin helps my knees), Omega-3 supplements and a joint supplement. The joint supplement is an advanced supplement for injured dogs sold at a national pet store. I also sprinkle about a teaspoon of gelatine on her food 2x daily. (I do not measure.)
Unfortunately, I was not as diligent as I should have been in restricting her activity at first. We were not at home during the first few months of her injury and controlling her activity was difficult. I started making it a priority to keep her activity level down and carrying her as much as I could to go outside. I think the key was not letting her go up or down stairs. I did not use a brace or therapy….just love and time! She is still holding her leg up a lot, but I see so much hope and improvement. It is so nice to see her actually walking again! I know it is going to be a long year of work, but I am trying to protect her other leg as well. I have read not to let a vet try to do a drawer test on her once she has started to heal, so I am going to heed that advice at our next appointment. When she is being groomed, my groomer knows to be cautious of her injury as well.
Sadie has had 2 bladder surgeries for bladder stones, and will need another one soon, so we are so happy to have learned about conservative management!

I enjoyed reading your success story about Birdie :) I went through the similar thing with my dog Lucy. When she tore her ACL it broke my heart seeing her in pain but I knew surgery wasn’t an option because of her age. I ended up getter her a brace from Woundware and it worked wonders. She didn’t even have a wobble in her walk anymore! I was happy to get my walking partner back and get joy hearing about other success stories about owners who have gone through the same thing.

Our 12 yr Beagle ruptured his cruciate ligament in May. Due to his 10 yr history of epilepsy we were reluctant to go the surgical route but sought specialist advice from a surgeon who said it was his only option. As he also ridiculed all the research I had done and undermined what our own vet was doing, we stuck to our guns and managed him conservatively. It wasn’t easy at first as he still wanted to run, jump and eat as normal and refused to be crated. After a month, by which time backache was my 24hr companion, we decided to let him do his own thing, within reason and by August he was back on his usual walks and a happy hound once more. Alas, now the opposite ligament has ruptured and he has only the weight-bearing capacity of the leg that ruptured in May so your comment about “spontaneous combustion” really resonated. Only last week I posted a video of him enjoying his walks having finally allowed myself to believe that we’d crossed the Rubicon. I asked the vet what might lie ahead and she said, “With any other dog I’d have said surgery was inevitable but having seen his attitude (for which read stubbornness/ determination/resilience/sheer beagle-mindedness!) lets see how it goes.”
Anyone else been in a situation of managing two ruptures conservatively?

I’m so sorry you guys are struggling with two injuries Clare. I don’t have any personal experience with this (yet!), but I’m wondering if the braces that are listed at the end of this blog might be helpful? Some of the folks who have commented here seemed to have a lot of success with them.

Thanks Jessica, I asked the vet about braces today but they don’t seem to use them in the UK. :(
Unfortunately Cuillin has now come down with an infection and has been commenced on antibiotics – so no action on his leg until he’s feeling better. (You know you have a sick beagle when food holds no interest – but fortunately he has started drinking since his anti-biotic injection.)

Daisy saw the vet on Saturday and she is healing well! She has been wearing the MuttKnee Brace since July. She is off pain meds and doing strengthening exercises for her leg. I hold up each of the good paws for 10 seconds and help her balance, walking backwards, and stepping through a ladder. She thinks it is more training like she had for therapy dog. Which she failed because she barked!

My puppy Thor is 2 months old. We was outside playing and he loves to chew on stuff and then run off. He slipped and started crying and it scared me really bad. I picked him up and took him inside and he was limping on his right rear leg. After a few hours he got up and was stretching his knee and it seemed fine. At one moment I was sitting with him and just lightly rub the leg he was limping on and he cried out. I rushed him to the vet in town and they examined him and said that we should look into surgery. I don’t understand why they was so quick to conclude to surgery so I asked for some pain meds and decided to give it some thought. He is walking but still Limping so what do you think?

It takes a while for an all to heal. I would definitely give it more than two days! Look for a vet in your area that offers treatment other than surgery. I had a tow year old do well on meds and rest and now my seven year old is doing well on meds rest and a muttkneebrace. She is off pain meds and working on strengthening her leg. This happened in July.m

Hi TJ, I’m sorry you and Thor are dealing with this. It sounds like getting a second opinion from another vet might be helpful, if you’d like too explore a few different options. Wishing you both well!

I would limit your puppy’s mobility. Carry her as much as you can and do not let her go up stairs.I was told that surgery was needed with a complete ACL tear that my dog had. After I started really limiting her mobility and giving her supplements…..she started walking again with out a limp! Do not ever rush to surgery without research! My pup has had 2 bladder surgeries for bladder stones that she had to have. But after researching about leg injuries … I know that in most cases they heal after time. It took 4-5 months ….but it was worth not having her go through the pain of needless surgery. I give my dog advance joint support, Knox Gelatine and Omega fatty Acid supplements. I use the same things! (human form)

I have a 2 yr old Pit Bull who I just had x-rayed yesterday. He slipped on the ice last year and I have suspected that he has a partially torn ACL and yes the X-rays have confirmed my suspicions. He does great for a while but after any running or jumping he gets sore. The vets are pressuring me to get the surgery done, but I’m not sold on it. I believe keeping him quiet, walking on a leash, weight management, and lots of TLC will probably give him as good a quality of life as if I went through with the surgery. There are no guarantees that the surgery will even be successful. Sure do get pressure though. I do have one friend that’s a vet and he has really encouraged me to follow my gut and I have really appreciated that.
Question: Has anyone used a leg brace to help support the knee with this kind of condition? I haven’t read through everything here so maybe it’s mentioned.

I took my Doberman into the veterinarian for an occasional hop that was so slight I thought he might have a splinter in his paw that I couldn’t find. When we went in, he could sit in good form, jump. and run for hours. When we came out, he had a severe limp and sat with his paw extended out to one side. Now when trying to sit, his back is arched to avoid placing pressure on the injured stifle. The physical exam performed on his leg was so brutal that now he has a more serious problem.

We have insurance for our pet, but we don’t want to use it to pay for surgery. We have opted for Conservative Management and want to share our journey and what we have learned along the way with others. We have created a facebook page called “Conservative Management for Dogs” (https://www.facebook.com/DogConservativeManagement). Anyone who wishes to contribute to the community is also welcome to share.

Was Birdie’s affected leg larger than the other leg during and after recovery. My dog is recovering with conservative management and I worry that the increased size of her stifle is something more sinister. I dont want my vet to check it just in case she makes it worse.

Aloha,
I been reading your website and would like to say THANK-YOU for sharing your story and educating us all . I’m from Oahu, Hawaii and was wondering do we have an rehabs or vets that offer CM? I have never heard or seen this.